NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 Saturday, August 20, 2022 North Powder Community United Methodist Church nears milestone By DICK MASON The Observer NORTH POWDER — It may be the most memorable dollar ever spent in North Powder’s history. In 1882, Sarah and James W. Welch sold a block of property in North Powder for $1 to the United Methodist and Episcopal churches, according to records. The Meth- odists and Episcopalians built a church on the block in 1883, which they shared for four years before the Methodists assumed full ownership. Today, the North Powder Community United Methodist Church is on the verge of joining a select circle — a limited number of other churches in Oregon to have operated in the same building for at least 140 years. It is not hard to imagine what the church looked like in 1883. The building is filled with links to its past, including about three wooden pews believed to be the same ones the church first had in the 1880s and a bell in a tower that congregants still ring with the pull of a rope before every weekly Sunday service. These vestiges to the past are in a well-maintained building that looks much like it did 139 years ago, according to Jeff Nielsen, a member of the church’s congregation. “It is pretty unique. Most churches this old have at best been remodeled at least five times,” he said. “It is an original pioneer church. It is pretty phenomenal.” The church also has ledgers filled with the names of almost all the members of the church’s congre- Dick Mason/The Observer Susanne Watson, left, checks an earring worn by Linda Dixon on Sunday, Aug. 14, 2022, in the sanctuary of the North Powder Community United Methodist Church. gations dating back to the 1800s. “If these walls could talk, they could tell so much about the gener- ations of people who grew up here,” he said. The North Powder Commu- nity United Methodist Church has about twice the square footage it had when it opened in 1883, accord- ing to Linda Dixon, a member of the church’s congregation. The space was added in the 1940s when an east side addition was built on. Today, this addition houses the church’s Sunday school program, one temporarily shut down after the COVID-19 pandemic, and the community’s food bank. SUNDAY instead reliant on a wood stove in the winter. “It can get so hot that it almost drives people out of here,’’ Dixon said with a smile. Older is sometimes better A focal point of services in the sanctuary are Bible-centered talks given on alternating weeks by Dixon and Susanne Watson, also a congregation member. Watson said she feels blessed to be able to help give the talks because preparing for them has been so enriching. “I have lear ned so much more about the Lord and the In an ironic twist, operating the older half of the building is today less expensive than running its newer half, since the older section has no plumbing. This means it does not need heat to keep water pipes from freezing, said Joyce Lawyer, a member of the church’s congrega- tion for more than 60 years. The church’s sanctuary is Forecast for Pendleton Area TODAY The food bank, an outreach of the church, is run with major help from Dixon and her husband, Floyd, who travel to Island City each month to pick up food from the Northeast Oregon Regional Food Bank. | Go to AccuWeather.com MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY Messages to remember Wallowa resale shop steps up By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain Sunny to partly cloudy and hot Mostly sunny and hot 95° 63° 98° 65° Partly sunny Hot with plenty of sunshine Hot with plenty of sun PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 93° 63° 94° 63° 97° 65° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 98° 63° 98° 65° 96° 64° 94° 60° OREGON FORECAST 100° 64° ALMANAC Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. PENDLETON through 3 p.m. Fri. HIGH LOW TEMP. Seattle 78/60 Olympia 72/59 90/56 97/60 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 95/67 Lewiston 79/58 99/63 Astoria 71/58 Pullman Yakima 96/62 78/55 98/69 Portland Hermiston 83/62 The Dalles 98/63 Salem Corvallis 84/54 Friday Normals Records La Grande 92/58 PRECIPITATION John Day Eugene Bend 89/54 92/56 95/55 Ontario 98/65 Caldwell Burns 93° 66° 90° 56° 106° (1967) 42° (1973) 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Albany 85/54 Boardman Pendleton Medford 97/63 0.00" 0.02" 0.10" 7.50" 2.46" 5.24" WINDS (in mph) 94/62 94/54 0.00" 0.04" 0.19" 11.17" 4.35" 8.50" through 3 p.m. Fri. HIGH LOW TEMP. Pendleton 88/56 86/57 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date HERMISTON Enterprise 95/63 93/65 94° 71° 88° 58° 109° (1897) 37° (1916) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 78/57 Aberdeen 94/64 95/67 Tacoma Friday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee Today Sun. WSW 8-16 W 7-14 WSW 4-8 WNW 6-12 SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls 93/52 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today New Full Last NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 106° in Redding, Calif. Low 34° in Bodie State Park, Calif. Aug 27 WALLOWA — Joining with other businesses and individuals to step up and help in the current emer- gency in Wallowa, the Wallowa Community Resale Store is expanding its hours with the help of volunteers. “We’re only able to do that because of the gener- osity of the community in donating their stuff,” owner Deborrah Reth said. T h e Re s a le St o r e , which sells a wide variety of second-hand clothing, household goods, books and other items, may have just what Wallowa resi- dents need after the storm that pummeled the town with hail and wind Aug. 11. The hail broke windows on nearly every west-facing side of Wallowa’s build- ings, sending shards of glass inside and across beds and other furniture. Mayor Gary Hulse has recommended that residents replace such furniture rather than trying to excise the 6:01 a.m. 7:55 p.m. none 3:58 p.m. First Sep 3 Sep 10 Sep 17 NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY Bible,” she said. The North Powder Community United Methodist Church today has a congregation of fewer than 20 people — much smaller than what it once had. Nevertheless, the church’s future appears solid because it has a long-running tradition as a focal point for community events. This means that whenever help is needed to keep the building operat- ing, people step forward instantly, many of whom are not members of the congregation. “Whenever we need help, all we have to do is ask,” Dixon said. Volunteers who help the church, but are not members, include Ted Golden, who picks up food in Island City each week and brings it to the food bank. The church also hosts commu- nity events, such as the annual silver tea that has happened for 102 years, Lawyer said. Pews are temporar- ily removed from the sanctuary to make room for the tea, which draws at least 50 people each year. Another popular event at the church is its annual Easter egg hunt, which attracts about 100 children. This year’s Easter egg hunt, Dixon said, was run with several inches of snow on the ground. Such events are under the direction of a congregation that is remarkably close, Watson said. “The people who attend are not just friends and neighbors, we are more like a family,” she said. A family with no shortage of generosity. “We want to help as many people as we can,” Watson said. glass and continue to use it. Although the Resale Store doesn’t have beds — there’s just not room — it does have bedding and pillows. It also can serve as a clearinghouse for people who have such items to donate. They can call the shop and Reth or one of the volunteers who is help- ing can help match up donor and recipient. “A lot of people are still assessing what their losses are,” Reth said. She said she was fortu- nate in that the shop has no west-facing window With a new school year just around the corner, parents also can come into get school clothes for their kids. That comes in handy for those whose cars were damage by the hail. “There are people who don’t have cars to go to La Grande to get school clothes,” she said. A major change at the Resale Store is that during the emergency, it’s stay- ing open all week long. Normally it’s open Thurs- day th rough Sat urday, THE COMMUNITY RESALE STORE Who: Deborrah Reth What: Second-hand shop Where: Highway 82 and Pine Street, Wallowa Phone: 541-398-0137 Email: deborrahreth@ gmail.com but now it’s open Monday through Wednesday, as well, Reth said. “We’re open all week for anybody who needs to replace their damaged things,” she said. “The county needs this,” said Hilary Miller, one of the many volunteers helping stretch the Resale Store’s hours. Reth, who has run the the Resale Store for about 10 years, has been doing well since the pandemic, partic- ularly since it has wound down. “Last winter, we were so busy because people needed to shop coming out of the pandemic,” she said. IN BRIEF 125 miles east of Baker City. Bend Fire & Rescue officials said Daniel Harro was an avid flight enthusiast. The YELLOW PINE, Idaho — A Bend fire- type of aircraft involved in the crash was not fighter and his twin brother were killed in a immediately available. small plane crash Monday morning, Aug. 15, Prior to joining Bend Fire & Rescue, near Yellow Pine, Idaho. Daniel Harro worked with the Scap- The cause of the crash that killed poose Fire Department. engineer Daniel Harro, 38, and his Since joining the Bend fire depart- brother, Mark, also 38, is under inves- ment, Harro has been involved with tigation, according to a release by the agency’s rescue team and served Bend Fire & Rescue, where Daniel on the local firefighter union’s execu- Harro has worked since 2014. tive board. Daniel Harro was the plane’s pilot. Daniel Harro According to the department, “This is just so shocking for our Harro was a strong paramedic who family,” Bend Fire Chief Todd Riley said. worked with department administrators “Daniel was well-loved and well-respected and physician advisers to update emergency by everyone who worked with him. We will medical service protocols. miss his presence every day.” Harro is survived by his wife, Elisif. Engineer Harro and his brother Mark were The department is coordinating honor returning to Bend from a back-country plane services with the Oregon Fire Service Honor camping trip near McCall, Idaho, about 40 Guard and Harro’s family. miles west of Yellow Pine. McCall is about — EO Media Group Twin brothers from Bend die in Idaho plane crash Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. 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